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Wednesday, February 06, 2008
John Stossel :: Townhall.com Columnist
USA Makes Adoption Harder
by John Stossel
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Will the Dems' health care Christmas Present to America be an improvement or detriment to our health care system?


Yet U.S. officials want adoption back in the hands of government?!

There's little reason to expect the current government to do much better. Guatemala is one of the more corrupt nations in the world, 111th out of 179 countries, says Transparency International.

Even if the new bureaucracy isn't corrupt, there's little chance it will process adoptions as quickly as the brokers did because without profit, it has no incentive to move the kids through the cumbersome adoption process. When other countries have put adoption in government hands, adoptions slowed or stopped. Paraguay went from sending more than 400 kids to the U.S. in 1996 to sending zero in 2006.

That's a tragedy.

It may make some people uncomfortable that a middleman charges $5,000 to arrange an adoption, but profit isn't evil.

Someone has to be compensated for arranging the DNA tests and leading hopeful parents past the government's obstacles. The orphanages need funds. If some Americans are willing to pay even $50,000 to adopt, that's not a bad thing. NGOs, politicians and bureaucrats may call it disgusting "human trafficking," but I call it finding love for children who desperately need it.

Guatemala has followed America's lead, and now thousands of abandoned Guatemalan kids face spending their childhood in orphanages. Many could have found a home in the U.S. if only government -- American and Guatemalan -- had stayed out of the way.

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About The Author
John Stossel blogs at http://blogs.abcnews.com/johnstossel/ is an award-winning news correspondent and author of Myths, Lies, and Downright Stupidity: Get Out the Shovel--Why Everything You Know is Wrong.
 
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Pro-life hypocrisy and pet goat
Since Pet Goat hasn’t responded to my question about his allegation that prolifers are hypocritical, I’ll just jump right into that from the domestic policy angle.

One of the biggest contributors to the American foster care system is drug addicted birth mothers. Substance abuse often results in brain damage during gestation and physical abuse or neglect after a child is born.

I mentioned in a previous post my friend Susan (who tried to adopt 11 of her 12 foster kids.) She had been a labor and delivery nurse for one the of county hospitals in Phoenix before she came home to birth and raise her biological children.

One meth addict was delivering her 8th baby in 10 years. The OB assisting had delivered the last 4. She was never prosecuted. CPS took each drug addicted baby at birth. The OB was so frustrated when she came in to deliver #8, he told her, “If you sign this piece of paper, I’ll tie your tubes for free.” The woman was completely out of her mind on meth but signed the paper and the OB tied her tubes during her c-section at no additional charge. Obviously it is illegal to do so, but it is hard to find anyone who would complain about it.

The Pro Life Issue

Pro lifers believe children in the womb have exactly the same rights as children who have been born. So, pro-life groups often support proposed legislation that would prosecute a mother who uses illicit drugs during pregnancy the same as a mother who would give her child, already born, illicit drugs. Guess who often opposes that legislation? Guess why? Because once you establish equal rights for children in and out of the womb, it doesn’t take much to make abortion illegal and prosecute aborting mothers and physicians.

Center for Arizona Policy is one organization that has proposed this type of legislation.

The Free Market Doesn't Work
Guatemala has had serious problems with this issue for a long time. Stossel and many of the other readers in this forum seem to believe that the "free market" is the answer to all of our societal woes. The Guatemala case exemplifies precisely how damaging such a blind ideological philosophy can be. The author discounts the irregularities based upon a Guatemalan journalist. This individual either has a vested interest in the adoption market, or else she has her head in the sand. Multiple reports in 2000 uncovered multiple cases of fraud, baby swapping, and trafficking. Why do you think that the U.S. has implemented the double DNA test (which doesn't really solve the problem at all - just forces "adoption professionals" to do their trick twice instead of once)? Guatemala is the only country in the world where the double DNA test is in place. In 2001 embassy officials admitted to having serious doubts about how babies came to be available for adoption there. However, they were powerless to affect change because of they were in compliance with U.S. law. In the 2006 book, "Outsiders Within" adult adoptees from around the world expose the true circumstances surrounding their own adoptions. Framed as an act of selfless love by caring Americans, many adoptions in the past were really based upon deceit, fraud, or simply misunderstanding. A recent study in the Marshall Islands, for example found that 70% of relinquishing parents (from 2 decades ago) believed that they were giving up their children only temporarily, when in reality their relinquishments were forever. Private attorneys in Guatemala hire "baby finders", who most often seek out the most vulnerable and economically marginalized members of a society. The problem in Guatemala could be easily remedied if just even 20% of their fees were collected and used for the creation of an neutral and independent authority.
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